Golden Knights open difficult trip against formidable Jets

Following a rare five-day break, the Pacific Division-leading Vegas Golden Knights depart for arguably their toughest road trip of the season.Vegas will play three games in four days, including gam

Golden Knights open difficult trip against formidable Jets

Following a rare five-day break, the Pacific Division-leading Vegas Golden Knights depart for arguably their toughest road trip of the season.

Vegas will play three games in four days, including games against the two teams that are tied for the NHL lead in points. It starts Thursday against the Winnipeg Jets.

After a day off Friday, the Golden Knights will have a back-to-back, beginning with a Saturday afternoon game against Connor McDavid and the defending Western Conference champion Edmonton Oilers. Then early Sunday Vegas faces the Central Division co-leader Minnesota Wild.

Winnipeg, which is coming off an 8-1 thumping of the visiting Boston Bruins on Tuesday, and Minnesota are atop the NHL with 42 points.

Vegas is on a three-game win streak, having outscored its opponents 8-3 in the process, including a 1-0 win over McDavid and the Oilers in Las Vegas. The Golden Knights haven’t played since Friday night, when they held on to defeat the visiting Dallas Stars 3-2 behind 38 saves by Adin Hill.

“We have had time to recover,” Golden Knights coach Bruce Cassidy said. “I thought it was right for us because of the intensity of our schedule early on, so we needed it. It came at a good time for us.

“We’ll be back to work three (games) in four (days) this week. We’ll be on the ice a lot. Hopefully they’ll have lots of energy in the third periods. That’s what your rest does for you, should give you some legs each night and then on the last game on Sunday. Hopefully we haven’t skated them into the ground this week where we have something left for that game, too.”

Cassidy said the Golden Knights spent a lot of time working on fundamentals.

“Playing through hands, stick-on-puck details, all the stuff that when you’re playing a lot of games you’re not practicing,” he said. “I don’t want to say (it was a) mini training camp because that’s probably not accurate, but in some respects, (we did) daily drills we would have done in training camp for some of them.”

First stop will be a matchup against the Jets, who have won three of their last four and equaled their season-high with eight goals against Boston. It marked the ninth time Winnipeg scored six or more goals in a game, tops in the NHL.

The No. 1 line of Mark Scheifele (two goals, one assist), Kyle Connor (one goal, two assists) and Gabriel Vilardi (one goal, one assist) accounted for four goals and eight points against the Bruins as Winnipeg improved to 10-3-0 at home.

“I thought we played a helluva hockey game,” Jets coach Scott Arniel said. “I really liked just the fact that we were in attack mode all the game.”

Scheifele and Connor entered Wednesday tied for eighth in the NHL with 16 goals each.

“Usually when they play like that, it leads to a win,” forward Adam Lowry said. “They came up huge for us throughout the game. Dominant shifts, some huge goals at critical times to get us in the lead and things like that. Their line has had a great year so far, and it kind of starts with Mark driving it down the middle. In order for us to be successful, that’s the line we look to.”